Answer:
Sensory Memory, Attention, Working/Short-term Memory, Elaborative rehearsal, Encoding, Long-Term memory & Retrieval
Explanation:
The sructures and processes involved in Atkinson and Shiffrin's three-stage model of memory are in the following order:
- Sensory memory - holds an exact copy of what is seen or heard for a few seconds or less. It holds information long enough to be processed for basic physical characteristics.
- Attention - this is needed to transfer information to working/short-term memory.
- Working/Short-term memory - temporary storage for small amount of information. The short-term memory has 7 slots for information.
- Elaborative rehearsal - This is done to keep information in the short-term memory for longer than the normal time frame of 25-35 seconds.
- Long-term memory - Once information passes from sensory to short-term memory, it can be encoded into long-term memory where it becomes relatively permanent.